Artificial intelligence and create opportunities in new areas of work

in #technology7 years ago (edited)

 Artificial intelligence, creating opportunities in new fields of work,  and providing human services to complete artificial intelligence


When  printed books with illustrations first appeared in 1470 in the German  city of Augsburg, they began to disgorge the wood because they were  worried about their jobs, and the presses actually stopped. In fact, the demand for their skills has grown more than ever since  someone had to draw illustrations in the growing number of books.

Since then, concerns about the impact of technology on jobs have emerged. The latest concern is the arrival of artificial intelligence. But again, technology has created new jobs. For example, the number of people providing digital services online is  increasing through what is sometimes called the "human cloud", many of  whom do so in response to artificial intelligence as an obvious  response.

According  to the World Bank, more than 5 million people seek to work remotely in  online markets such as Freelancer and Opork, in jobs ranging from web  design to writing formal recommendations, and usually earn at least a  few dollars an hour. In 2016 these companies achieved about $ 6 billion of revenue. According  to the career analysis team - market researchers - those who prefer to  work in small environments can use the sites of "retail companies" such  as Leaving Mechanical (Turk), a service under the management of Amazon. About 500,000 "site users" perform tasks such as audio files, many of  which do not receive more than a few cents for each "mission that  requires human understanding."

Many  large technology companies outsource, and thousands of people who  control the services of private companies have quality control. Google  is said to have an army of "residents" about 10,000 workers, who look  at YouTube videos or test new services and other miscellaneous things. Microsoft is running a system called Global Human Harmony, which  handles millions of precise tasks each month, such as checking the  results of search algorithms.

These figures are likely to rise and one reason is the increased demand for "moderate content". The  new law in Germany will require social media to remove any illegal  content in the country within 24 hours or to be subject to large fines,  such as denying the Nazi Holocaust in Germany. Facebook has announced that it will increase the number of global supervisors from 4500 to 7500.

Artificial  intelligence will be able to eliminate some forms of this digital work  from software. For example, artificial intelligence improves the  discharge of acoustics. Artificial intelligence, however, will also create demand for other types of digital work. Technology may use a lot of computing power and mathematical equations, but it also depends on data entered by humans. For  motor vehicles to recognize road signs and pedestrians, algorithms must  be programmed to feed a lot of videos containing each, and these shots  must be "tagged" manually, which means that traffic signs and  pedestrians should be marked as such. The tags keep thousands busy, and when an algorithm is put to work,  humans must check whether the algorithm works well and give feedback to  improve it.

CrowdFlower offers a small task start-up service, an example of the so-called "human in a loop". Digital workers classify email inquiries from consumers by content, sentiment, and other criteria. This data is fed through an algorithm that enables handling of most queries. But questions that have no simple answer are once again directed at man.

As algorithms are improved, it is expected that the human will be ejected from the loop. But this is unlikely to happen soon, or never, says Mary Gray, who works in Microsoft's search department. The  algorithms may eventually become smart enough to handle certain tasks  on their own and learn on their own, but consumers and businesses will  also expect more services than artificial intelligence: Digital  assistants like Alexa of Amazon and Microsoft Courtana will have to  answer the most complex questions, Man will still need to program algorithms and deal with exceptions.

As  a result, Ms. Gray and Sidhart Sury, who collaborates in Microsoft  research, see services such as UpWork and Mechanical Turk as early signs  of things to come. They  expect to divide a lot of humanitarian work into multiple tasks that  can be delivered online with artificial intelligence displays. For example, travel companies may use artificial intelligence to  handle routine tasks (such as booking flights), but more complex  requests (such as request for custom city tours) are routed to humans.

Michael  Bernstein and Melissa Valentin of Stanford University predict that  things will change even more. They expect the rise of temporary  "companies" whose employees are hired online and configured with the  help of artificial intelligence. To  test the idea, the researchers developed a program to assemble these  virtual companies for specific projects - for example, hiring and hiring  workers to design a smart application to report injuries from rushed  ambulances to the hospital. 

 Working in such temporary organizations can be "flash organizations" fun. But many fear that the human cloud will create a global digital working class. Sarah  Roberts of the University of California at Los Angeles found that  content supervisors often suffer from exhaustion after examining the  content of long-term social media. Mark  Graham of the University of Oxford found that online platforms already  provide new sources of income for many, especially in poor countries,  but they also reduce wages. Governments should be careful when designing large digital action  programs - as Kenya did, hoping to train more than 1 million people on  e-jobs.

Technology is rarely an obstacle or an unobtrusive blessing. The printing press set up new works for woodworking in Augsburg, but soon discovered it was routine. Similar deals are likely to be made in the future.

Source 

https://www.economist.com/news/business/21727093-humans-will-supply-digital-services-complement-ai-artificial-intelligence-will-create-new



Sort:  

Great job. Carry on Brother.

Simple Kiso Word Use Korle Spam Dorbe...
Red Flag dile problem hote pare...

yup AI is growing like missiles, very fast they want to make the machines thinks which i don't believe will be possible let's see the changes upcoming, the new era of technology

This AI thing is very promising and I'm glad that work is becoming more and more sophisticated. However, it is good to be very well acquainted with digital developments and to seize the greatest opportunites out there ;)

its a good post.you are right.we need to be creative and try our best

Coin Marketplace

STEEM 0.17
TRX 0.14
JST 0.028
BTC 59471.57
ETH 2618.20
USDT 1.00
SBD 2.40